The Dragon is feared or revered depending on the culture that has fashioned him. In the West, Western Europe in particular, he has been depicted as a “scaly and horned dinosaur-like creature, with leathery wings, with four legs and a long muscular tail. It is sometimes shown with feathered wings, crests, fiery manes, ivory spikes running down its spine and various exotic colorations.”[i] He has also been depicted as a fire-breathing and winged creature.

The dragon may also be the Old English wyrm, the Old High German wurm and the Old norse ormr, i.e. a serpent. In Finland, he is the ohikäärme or salmon-snake. The European dragon may therefore be a serpent-dragon.

But whatever his appearance, he symbolizes evil and, in the past, those who killed a dragon were often beatified.

Dragon-slaying and Sainthood

According to my Brewers, “saints pictured as dragon-slayers are St Michael, St George, St Margaret, St Samson, archbishop of Dol, St Clement of Metz, St Romain of Rouen, destroyer of the huge dragon La Gargouille* which ravaged the Seine, St Philip the Apostle, St Martha, slayer of the terrible gragon Tarasque (associated with Tarascon, the saint’s patronal city), St Florent, who killed a dragon which haunted the Loire, St Cado, St Maudet and St Pol, who performed similar feats in Brittany, and St Keyne of Cornwall.”

* the Gargoyle, or drain-spout

The Heraldic Dragon

Moreover, according to Brewers , “[a]mong the ancient Britons and the Welsh” the dragon was the “national symbol on the war standard.”[ii] The dragon appears in heraldy as do the zoomorphic, transcultural and fabulous phoenix, griffin and unicorn and each plays a different role. In heraldry, the dragon may embolden the warrior or the jousting knight.

The Dragon in Ancient Greece: the vigilant Dragon

The origin of the word dragon is the Greek word drakōn. The word drakōn is related to the word drakos or ‘eye’ and in Greek mythology a serpentine and hundred-headed dragon named Ladon guarded Hera’s garden, the garden of Hesperides, tended to by four nymphs. In its orchard, one tree produced golden apples that bestowed immortality or godliness, hence Ladon’s uninterrupted vigilance. The serpentine Ladon never slept.

The Middle Eastern Dragon and the Chinese Dragon

In the Middle Eastern World, where snakes are large and can kill, the serpent-dragon was “a principle of evil”[iii] and as dreaded as he was in Europe. However, the Chinese Dragon, who is usually depicted as a serpentine creature with four legs, “symbolizes potent and auspicious powers.” He is strong and, given that he has control over water, rainfall, hurricane, and floods, he is a symbol of power. Moreover, he also symbolizes good luck and in yin and yang terminology, a dragon is yang and complements a yinfenghuang (“Chinese phoenix”). As well, in the orient, not only is the dragon architectural, as is the gargoyle, but he is used for decorative purposes. He adorns cloisonnés, vases and entire walls.

— Ljubljana Dragon

A Serpent Cult and the Protective Dragon

Yet there exists a serpent cult and the feared dragon has also been viewed as protective, which makes perfect sense. If the dragon can inspire terror, he does so universally. He is therefore a good protector. Such was his role as Ladon and such is the role given the Ljubljana Dragon. He is a protector and is featured in the city’s coat of arms.

Kenneth Grahame’s The Reluctant Dragon, 1898

Moreover, if he is protective of a community, in 1898, ten years before he published The Wind in the Willows (1908), where Mr Toad is Toad of Toad Hall, Kenneth Grahame (March 8, 1859 – July 6, 1932) had published The Reluctant Dragon, a story included in Dream Days (1898). So there has been a rehabilitation of the dragon and, for that matter, of several formerly frightening animals: the toad.

The Dragon and the Grotesque

Furthermore, the dragon belongs to the grotesque which makes him a permanent denizen of the imagination. During certain periods, the grotesque has been a main feature of art, literature, architecture and decoration. As we have seen the drain-spouts of Gothic cathedrals were gargoyles and, therefore, dragons or dragon-like. In fact, the medieval bestiaries featured quite a ménagerie of zoomorphic animals. So even when the grotesque is not fashionable, it simply lays dormant.

The Gothic Revival and Beauty and the Beast

For instance, there was a Gothic revival in the nineteenth century and, consequently, a revival of the Grotesque. Victor Hugo championed the Grotesque and created Quasimodo, the hunchback of Notre-Dame. Let us recall, moreover that, in Beautyand the Beast, Beauty falls in love with Beast as Beast. She does not know that the moment he is loved, Beast will turn into his princely self. So there may be room for beings that one may at first consider as repulsive.

Chinese Dragon

In short, the human imagination is such that it encompasses mythical creatures thus creating a reality of its own, an absolute reality, Novalis‘s réel absolu.* Myths such as animal myths help us make sense of our world and organize it. Most practicing Christians do not question the reality of angels. Yet they have wings. Yes they have wings, but who would dare dismiss his or her guardian angel? As for the dragon, he is now “reluctant.”